Synopsis The Canadian oil tanker ENERCHEM REFINER, with a cargo of 5,882 tonnes of fuel oil, was en route to the marine terminal at Tracy, from the Port of Qubec, Quebec. During berthing manoeuvres, under the conduct of a pilot, the port bow of the vessel struck the middle dolphin of the terminal. One of the terminal's two unloading arms extended outward and struck the bulwark of the vessel. Crew members at the bow mooring station tried to clear it, but while they were doing this, one of them had his hand crushed. The injured crew member was taken to a local hospital by ambulance. The vessel sustained minor damage, and the fender on the middle caisson was slightly damaged. Other Factual Information Particulars of the Vessel Port of Registry Toronto, Ontario Propulsion Two Morse Fairbanks engines, 2451kW, driving two propellers At about 0800(1) , 15November 1995, a north-east wind was blowing at 30 knots. On approaching the marine terminal at Tracy, the crew noted that the winds were gusting stronger in the heavy rain. At 0855, with the vessel under the conduct of a pilot, the master made an initial bridge-control speed reduction of the two main engines. At first, the ship's centre line formed a sharp angle with the face of the three dolphins of the terminal. Then, the vessel was steered toward the middle dolphin. When the ship's bow was about 20 metres off the downstream dolphin, the third officer, on the forecastle, started calling out the closing distance to the bridge. At approximately 0908, the port shoulder of the vessel struck the downstream corner of the middle dolphin. The impact caused one rubber section of the fender on the ship's port shoulder to separate from its mount and become wedged in the rubber fender of the middle dolphin. The crew felt no jarring, but the wharf operator, who was taking the No.2 head spring, felt a jerky movement that shook the middle dolphin and the unloading arms. The wharf operator heard the lever that holds the lock screw against the coupling ball of the upstream unloading arm fall. The upstream unloading arm, which was no longer secured, extended outward and fell on the forecastle break, then on the port bulwark. The unloading arm slid aft along the bulwark rail, as the vessel still had some headway. The third officer and an ordinary seaman tried to clear the unloading arm to prevent it from striking the landing boom. While they were doing this, the seaman's left hand was crushed between the unloading arm and the landing boom guy wire, which was secured to the bulwark rail. The injured crew member moved away from the bulwark and the third officer was able to clear the unloading arm, while the vessel was manoeuvred astern away from the dolphin. The injured man went to his cabin, where the first mate noted the seriousness of the injury and notified the master. Meanwhile, the operator called the chief wharf operator by radiotelephone, and then called the Hydro-Qubec employee in charge. The turnbuckle connecting the landing boom guy wire to the bulwark rail was severed in two places and the steel cable which served as a guy wire was unravelled. There were rubber scuff marks on the ship's port shoulder. At the request of the master, the pilot telephoned for an ambulance. The Hydro-Qubec equipment mechanics rushed to the middle dolphin, started up the hydraulic system, raised the unloading arm and stowed it in place. At 0923, the bow of the vessel was manoeuvred against the middle dolphin and, at 0925, the injured crew member disembarked. At 0942, the seaman was taken to Htel-Dieu Hospital in Sorel, where he underwent surgery on the ring finger and little finger of his left hand. The tanker was manoeuvred into position and the berthing manoeuvre was completed around 1000. Hydro-Qubec personnel inspected the unloading arm and found no apparent damage. The unloading arm was secured to the manifold of the tanker. The three dolphins are mounted on piles and linked by catwalks. One vertical section of the rubber fender on the middle dolphin was shifted and frayed where the piece of rubber from the ship's fender was wedged. There are two unloading arms on the middle dolphin, one upstream and one downstream. Each unloading arm has a securing mechanism. The securing mechanism consists of a coupling ball on one end of the unloading arm and a lock screw on a hinged lever at the base of the unloading arm frame. There was no apparent damage to the securing mechanisms or the unloading arm frames. The lock screw lever is not held in the secured position by force of gravity. The lock screw that did not come loose (downstream) has a wing head. The lock screw that did come loose (upstream) has a square head. The axis of the coupling ball is not perpendicular to the axis of the lock screw lever.